YELLOW-BELLIED FLYCATCHER. 42? 
cato, and makes more or less pause after each couplet, the Yellow- 
bellied whistles four notes, kil-lic kil-Uc, with but a short pause 
a mere rest — between each pair, and delivers the notes with a 
trifle less abruptness. 
Other notes of the present species resemble mipe-we-yea. 
These are heard when a pair are in dose companionship. They 
are soft, sweet, cooing-notes, delivered in a plaintive tone that 
suggests the tender pathos of the Pewee’s. 
Note. — The Fork-tailed Flycatcher {Milvulus tyrannus), 
a bird of Central and South America, has occasionally wandered 
north, and been taken in Mississippi, Kentucky, and New Jersey. 
Also a few examples of the Scissor-taileu Flycatcher 
{Milvulusforjicatzcs), which rarely appears north or east of Texas, 
have been seen in Virginia, New Jersey, Connecticut, Ontario, and 
Manitoba, and one wandered to the shores of Hudson Bay. 
